y v HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IV. MDGrAVAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUHSDAY, FEHUUABY 4, 187'). XO. 50. Of hog. Vim may sing of your dog, your bottom do;;, Or of any dog that you please 1 t" for the dog, the wise old dog, 'Hint knowingly takes his eawe, And. nagging his tail outside the ring, Kcopiug always his bone in Bight, Cares not a pin, in his wise old head. For eitlior dog in the fight. Not his is the bone they are fighting for, And why should any dog Bail in, With nothing to gain, but a certain chance To lone bis own precious skin ? There may be a few, perhaps, who f Hit To spc it in quite this light ; lint when the fur Hies, I bad rather be The outside dog in the figlit. 1 know there are dogs, most generous dogs. Who think it quite the thing To tako the part of the bottom dog. And go yelping into the ring. 1 care not a piowhat the world may say In regard to the wrong or right ; My money goes, as well as my song, For the dog that keeps out of the light. oiii 'mi THE POSY OF SANDY GULCH. They culled the place Sandy Gulch; it was hard to understand why, for it was lull of rocks, apparently. There was not sand enough visible to scour a pan but then, pans in Sandy Gulch were not scoured.' There was a deeply bronzed and heavily bearded set of men, heavy drinkers all; and there were no women, at least until Phoebe arrived. Slim Jim was the autocrat of the place; he kept the Xew Orleans Saloon. Liquors were dispensed in the front room, and faro in the rear. I'lunbe lived " a smart piece " above it, in a rough place, half canvas and half logn. What old Langsdale had bronirht hT there for 110 one could im agine; she had been the only woman on the ship when they made their weary six-months' voyage from New York, anil now she was t lie only woman in Sandv Gulch. Pluebe was twenty most girls are pretty at twenty, if they are ever going to be pretty; Pluebe had hazel eyes, and rounded, rose-pink cheeks, and the prettiest pouting mouth in the world. Ihe bandy Gulchers thought her a god- dess, and adored her accordingly. Old Langsdale took the best of care of his daughter. When he moved his claim he moved his cabin, too; and al- ways kept near enough for Phoebe to hear the sound of his pick. When the diggings gave out iu one place, the cabin was "toted" to where they had not given out. He never lacked help iu moving his cabin there were always plenty of Sandy Gulchers anxious to lend a hand; they even quarreled about it, and Lnngsdulo obliged them to take turns. You see, they called it " helping Pluebe." There were not many loafers iu camp; the people had come there to make a fortune, end could not afford to loaf; but there were u few, a couple of Mexicans " Greasers," the miners called them-and two or three of the stamp of Slim Jim. They were always busy enough at night; in the daytime they hung round the New Orleans S doon, and they would have liked to have visited Pluebe, but old Langsdale would not have it. He borrowed a pot of black paint and a brush, and painted over his door, " Notice! Xo Louesis Wanted." He thought that this would do, but ' one day he came homo and found Apo-! uoca mere. I'neene was sitting 011 an empty butter keg, tho rose-pink in her round checks deepened a little, ami the pouting mouth was as smiling as you please. . Old Langsdale was mad; he called Apodoca out, and pointed to the notice on tho door. Apodoca planted his feet firmly 011 the ground, placed his arms akimbo, and gazed intently at tho letter-:, ing for some time; then, turning to Langsdale, he said, iu his politest ac cents : " No sabbee." " You no read I" interrupted Langs dale. " Me no sabbee read Inglis," replied ; Apodoca, taking his sombrero from the bush by the door which caught the hats of most of Phusbe's visitors; once in a while a hat was taken inside, if it chanced to be new, mid kicked under the table for safe keeping. " Well," said Langsdale, "I'll read it lor yer: ' Notice ." "he said this thuuderiug tones, which increased iu i in ! volume as he went on" No loafers wanted. That means, Git ! You sabbee that V " " Si, Seuor," replied Apodoca, with a sardonic smile, as, after a most profound bow to Phoebe, he placed his sombrero ou his head, and walked sere-nely away. " 1 11 liorsewnip tnat fool, el I ketch him yere agin, " said Langsdale, frown-! John felt melancholy; he was dead nig at Pluebe. I broke, and liad come to the conclusion " Why, papa, don't blame me," said the, tossing her head; "I couldu't tell him to clear out." " You needn't have been so dreadful sweet and smiling, though ! he replied. I just gave mm pouted Phojbo: " I a pleasant word, can't be cross to ; people, and Jose was very polite, I'm sure. Lttugsdalo muttered something about ! breaking his head," and went into the I John looked up, a trifle surprised, cabin for his dinner. Phoebe went iu ; " Hullo, Apodoca, that you r" aft -r him. When he had gone into the ' Apodoca responded that it was nil rear room, which was his room, par r.c- doubtedly himself, and invited John to a cellcnm:, slio softly closed the door be-' game of curds. John looked at his laud lain. The front room was her own; : it contained ner lieu, imr wardrobe, and j her trinkets; the latter were all presents, i And all of linn ml Thnv t.,wwl in u I row on a rough board shelf " speci-; mmiu " '..). ..,,...111 i.. TV,.. nuuiu uao UUKIU xu-sici II IUO -U.t-All.Ull JUlldl Ullll, RUU lint Jin ladies' eyes shine. reputation as an honost man had uot When a Sandy Gulcher found a uug- , been improved since he left Sandy got which was remarkable for purity or ; Gulch. So John tipped back a little boauty, ha set it aside for " Posy " more iu his chair, and said he couldn't; they all liked to call the blooming , had promised Langsdale and the Posy to maul their "Posy." The consequence ' ride home with them from Van Duzeu's was that Miss Pluebe hail several thou- j that night. sand dollars on her rough shelf, nnd Apodoca smiled serenely, aud said: went barefooted and huruheadetl, and " One little game; it takes but few wore a calico gown. She hud no fear of ; minutes." uny one robbing her. thouih there weie i "Come. -John." wii.l the I),m-(,iv " T'm scamps ill the camp who would have cut ; u in in s throat Kir a t?nth of the wealth ' winch riiWsuuggeUwpreeiill; ,nt -., tn.f . ft... i.i ;.. o . -i.. sti i i in nmiiiy union mud u,.v IU...IJU iirj nifcy : tut Ij attend tho grand i Bar, although she was , left her tnnkcts I undisturbed on the shelf, and found them there undisturbed on her return. J When she hud shut the door affcr lier father, rhoabe took from her pocket a new specimen n particularly fine one, ' nnd very valuable; it was a present just ; received from Jose Apodoca. It had ' probably been won in the rear room at ' Slim Jim's, but that did not trouble i Pluebe. When she first came to Cnli , fornia she had been shocked at a huudred I things which she now looked upon with indifference. She ndmired her nugget, somehow, and he and Apodoca played not for its value, but because it was i alone. Slim Jim looked on con pretty; perhaps becauso in her heart ! tempttlously. comuiiseratinclv. " Con- there was a soft place for the handsome Mexican. She despised him fo: .his lazi- ness, and yet-sho put it on the shelf with a sigh. "T'll tell papa," she thought to herself, " when he feels kinder toward Jose.' Yet, in spite of old Langsdiile's em phatic translation of the " Inglis" over his door. Apodoca came atraiu. Phoebe ' couldn't be cross to people," id smiled and chatted, rose-pink deep- ied in her cheeks, light brightened in ami eneil her eyes, until Jose was more enthralled and bewildered than ever. Hut, for all ' her pleasantness, Pluebe was a dutiful i daughter, and not only impressed lier ! adorer with the necessity of departing 1 oeiore ner intner came home for his dm uer, but likewise besought him not to j come again, unless to her evening recep- ; tion. The Posy and her father seldom i entertained less than twenty in an even- ! ing. Every one in the camp would hnv ! been there if the cabin had been biororer: as it was, half the callers had to content j " Gome here I" said the Posy, impeii themselves with standing outside, and "'isly. Bald Pete came, obediently, as catching now and then a word or u smile became a faithful subject. " What are from the goddess through the door- .the stakes ( John's got huthing to play way. The New Orleans Saloon did not yith. When did Jose get back '. Who begin to have such attractions for them; ' winning ;" and the evening before the Posy went to Bald Pete answered all the questions, Bootjack Bar, and held a grand' farewell but the one about the stakes he evaded, reception, in her ball dress, with slums ; "he made him tell how John had and stockings on. the saloon was wholly : deserted, and Slim Jim himself closed no. and went with the crowd to old Luiurs- dale's cabin. But Jose intimated, in mellifluous if adulterated Spanish Spanish flowed like , oil from Posy's ready tongue that he 1 could not speak more than two words to her in the evening, and besides (with a 1 smile and a jerk of his thumb toward I Slim Jim's), his business engagements; prevented his coining in the evening; , and, still besides that, lie must there meet a certain hated John, who was supposed to be the choice of her heart, as lie cer- tainly was of her father's. ! Pluebe pouted and made a face at the ! mention of John: he would have been a' grand catch for pretty Pluebe Langsdale iu the little down-east town where she had been brought up but the goddess of Sandy Gulch could afford to be scornful. Jose, however, Was inclined to question ,lce- Jn inside lier room, she took the sincerity of her acorn; she, in turn. ! ,lrom k1i" the ""W wlm'h lw1 protested vigorously, and, iu the midst i ,HT"- ? lVat lt from 'To'' BU;'. "topping of the discussion, old Langsdale walked j oui"iae tll;l00. threw it with all in unsuspiciously. Casting one look full 1,e . flitolh ' ' thick underbrush, of anger and disgust at his daughter, the j hlRV'ni,'?1 : "There, b ood-thirsty vd old man, who had the strength of a giant, ,h,iV , ,lll," went back, took the seized Anodooi lv the t,.,l,wH ,l rHt " hit nuggets gathering up the half lifted, half kicked hiiu out. veiling. "Git..( git!" at the top of his voice The Mexican, however, was not to be kicked out of anywhere by anybody with impunity, and, drawing his short, shaii) knife, without which a Sandy ; Gulcher would have been uurecogniza- ; ble, he made a furious bound toward the old man, with his knife upraised, and a murderous rage distorting Ins handsome fu?e; But Pluebe was there before him; , 8e'zmK llu urm with, her little brown lmnd, the rose-pink all faded out of her flltttlrH anil lini fivna itM.ln jtiwtn it'i lt 4-n ror, she cried: " Don't strike don't strike!" catching her breath in a terrified sob. Flinging his knife into the chap- 1 arral, he caught the terrified goddess in . his turns, pressed a burning kiss his first and last on the round warm cheek ' and fled, and Sandy Gulch knew him no ; more. He knew that Phoebe and her guardians would never forgive his draw- ing a knife xn old Langsdale, and ho nn- armed. A man who would resent nnv- thing from the Posy's father was not to be tolerated in Sandy Gulch. Time went by, and the goddess still reigned without 'a rival in her kingdom; and poor John still sued at her feet, though getting hopeless. His univer lis uiiiver- las proiul ivaiied nini sity education, his talents. family, his manly beauty, ull a nothing in his desire to gather tor him self tho blooming Posy; and then, he did have wretched luck. He ofteu said. with a gloomy smile, that when his pick went in, gold went out nt the other end. One night, John sat in the rear room, tipped back in his chair with his heels ou the window-sill. The Posy held no reception that evening; she had started at daybreak, accompanied by her futher, for a visit over to Van Duzeus. Aside from the unwonted absence of the Posy, that his chum was not worth as iniicl his pick; and then, although old Langs dale had invited him to ride over to Van Duzeu'e and help escort the Posv home I that llio-ht. vet he conbl not lmt let the remembrance of Phoebe's fool manner rankle in hi -u: I. more than the pros- pect of his felicity i .;Yd it. Jiw.ua nwhrn, Seuor John, said a musical voice. watch; in ten or fifteen minutes he iuiut ! be starting lor an Uiusen s. It had j been the Posy's sovereign desire to leave I tlwre ulioiit. ten o'el.ieL un.l u 1,.,mU I by moonlight; moreover, he knew that 1 41... r..:.,.. l. ...! i.: i i . i .... in gtod luck to-night; vou und I aguiust KlipWi - y Jak amV"." " Tm dead broUe'Tiitid John. .... ... . . . . . ri lend; I have plenty goid-diisi. , Se," and J drew out a baa;. WUiel looked comfoit.iblv plumu. He insisted l oa lending John au ounce, aud the game ixg. On the first deal Apodoca and I Jack were winners, and the former volunteered to treat. John begun to get interested in the game, then excited, then absorbed. lie called for more drinks, ho borrowed more gold-dust, he forgot the Posy and her moonlight ride. His brain seemed tube on lire;' now ho won, now ho lost. His losings were the grenter, for he must always bor row more dust from the " Greaser's " bag, so comfortably full. Slippery Jack and the Doctor slipped out of the 'game, ; founded fool !" he said to Bald fete , John's former partner" ho never had , 110 luck; oughter know it." I Meanwhile, the Posy rode home over I the mountain trail, in the silver moon- light, 111 a very bad temper. Her father 1 rode bef ore her; where was "that John," ! who ought to have been only too happy to nave the Honor 01 ruling behind her f I Whe had intended to be so pleasant to I him, too ! When they passed the New 1 Orleans Sulqon, it was brilliantly lighted; it was always bnllmnted lightly, all night, " Ask what time it is, papa," said rhoebe. Langsdale asked stood by the door, answered. Bald Pete, who " Two o'clock," he ' What are they so still in there lor f" asked Pluebe, accustomed to hear the most uproarious noises in the saloon. "Apodoca and John are playing, 1 replied Bald Pete. : borrowed gold dust until Jose would 1,,nd no more ; that lie had risked his claim and lost; his watch, his pick, the very clothes upon clean gone crazv," his back He's said Bald Pete- clean outern his wits." " What's he playing for now' the Posy. Bald Pete hesitated, and tried to evade the question, in vain. said I again "If you don't tell me," said she ''11 ' K" nprj" in and ask em. : " Wall," said Pete, peering up in tin- 1 darkness to get a look at the Posy's round, pretty face, " he's staked liis chances ter git you again the dust he's ; borrowed of Jose." " And who's winning ;" "I'm bound to say as Jose's winniu'," said Pete, sorrowfully. "Johu never had no luck at keards."" Pluebe whipped up llobiu a little, and followed her father up to the cabin in eor111,1H of her apron, that none might roll out slipped out of the door, and ran at full speed down to the saloon, the silver moonlight shining upon her as she went. Buhl Pete stood at door. " My eye !" he cried, when he saw- the j 1 the ! Posy. "Are they playing yet" she whis pered. He nodded assent. She took his hand and clung to it like a child, drawinghim into the room after her. Jose looked up wheu she came in. aud started: John ! w!w n''r' t(M' nlJtl let. the cards drop from 11W na!ll, -N'v'r "d em, John," H,,e 111 H(,,lw ". voice that he hardly lai-d her, ' I'm going to pay Jose for yollr "''bt; and she emptied the nug- K'ts ul)on tno table, between the two P"to18 wliioli lay there, one upon each "J"0' reuil.v to the hand of each player. W.'.le put '"T lm'.18 al'"n'l John's arm, '"'"'"K to it.RS f hived it, and tried 'u "aa mm uwaj. Apouocn nung ms curds upon tho floor, and, quick us a flush, Phoebe heard the crack ot las pistol once, I twice ! John fell back against the wall j , with a groan, the room was full of smoke ' and the smell ol burnt powder; then ' inhere as iieavy tlllul an,i Apodoe-a ! Mf between the wall and the table, I ; (leail wjtuont gronn or ft worJ. the j . Pistol, clenched last in lus stiffened i hand, went into the grave with him. : And two days after, with all the incon ! sisteney of a woman, the Posy searched the chaparral, far and near, to find the , nugget which she had scornfully thrown away, and which, for all her searching, she never found. , Johu was all very well she did love . him, and would marry him, but his ; wound had been nothing; Apodoca's aim, so fatally sure the second, had missed the first time, and John had : escaped with a mere flesh-wound. But i Jose " poor fellow !" his love cost him I his life, and even spoiled goddesses have tender women's hearts ! A Rich Mini's Possesions. The following estimate? of the estate of the late Ciq tain E'oer B. Ward, of Detroit, have been supplied by one of his exeenteirs, who regards them as somewhat below rather than above tho real value of the property : Wyandotte iron interest I.eeland intcieflH , Kihcr iiiteret Milwaukee iron work Chicago iron worka , . . . . jmi.nuu ' lnoono 5ti.(KX) i 1 Htm I ijuoo'nyjj i '2oooo0 I l jii.uoo ! Lu'ii.iKton hiteresTs Lauds in Michigan and other States Steamboat and vessel property t'Uryhtal City ulaiw works....". i , j.iwu . fciUriiw'i; neai estate in wetroit 75U,000 '''e ' Arizona copper iateret . . . luu DUO ! Total 3,3o(i,000 I By Captain Ward's will, which is au elaborate and business-like document. j the entire property is left to his family nnd personal friends, there being no public bequests. Inoenioi's. One of the most ingen ious advertisements issued at San Fran cisco, during lost summer, wart the following " lee, lee, ee, If you want 'it pure and . . . t .1 At a reasonable pr , ice. ' Follow no new elev But send to I'or 1 have the lurgest and bet stock i ever put up in thin city," The Pnlliolngj of Diphtheria. A physician says A lady writes us, asking several questions upon this sub- iect. She says the disease is quite preva ent in her locality. Her first question is, "Are 'diphtheria' and 'putrid sore throat ' the same ?" Second, "If death is caused from choking apnma or an inability to get breath ?" To her first question I answer " Yes." I know the laity (and some not ovor-well-posted doctors, too,) make a dis tinction from simply aelifference in the severity of the complaint in two or more crises; calling the more violent cases of ! d,lr!.,tl,w rtnd sore throat. I "i? ih.,lHe J8 ft l'titutuniBl j Tlm thr'.at is only one place out of 1 1,1 t friv us a local nP one. many appear ance. It attacks all mucous surfaces ear, eye, mouth, nose, oesophagus, stom ach, rectum, vagina, etc. indifferently. It may be in any two or three of thepe locidities iu the same person at once. It also shows itself on any abraded surface of an afflicted individual. The most general seat, however, is 011 the fauces (throat); yet cases are on rec ord where, although evident iu other parts of the same patient, there was no throat complaint. Locally, then, the expression " of the disease is but an inflammation of the mucous membrane with an exudation of an organozolete ( fibrinous) lymph. This shortly " organizes " (consolidates) to the leaden or ashen -colored membrane that ; is pathognomonic of the complaint. This I membrane you find wherever the iiifiam I matory process is set up, and it can be : readily pulled off, leaving the raw snr ! face beneath. Sometimes it gets to be ; very thick. It is the abundance of this membrane in the trachea and bronchial tulies that causes death by "strangula tion ;" it prevents the passage of air me chanically. To answer her second question : In some cases it is; in others it is not. Sometimes death occurs within forty eight hours, and before tliis exudation'is poured out from the inflamed surface anywhere. Again, when the disease does not attack tho larynx or trachea, "chok ing to death " is impossible. Death, in 1 majority ol cases in children, does, ! however, occur as she indicates. In nder persons death by asthenia fa I gradual wasting of the power of - life) is ; mil as common. j The disease is one of excessive vomit I ing frequently, and loathing of food ; 1 hence, uuless you are careful, your pa ; tieut verily starves to death. Again, some deaths are from nervous lesions a I paralysis somewhere as for instance! of ! the nerve of organic life to the heart. I Again, tho blood (which is normally sup I plied withfibrine) has the fibrine notably j increased; so much so that it clots iu the heart, thus causing death, j It is by 110 means so frequent a dis j ease as is supposed. .Oil er throat iu I llammations are very frequently called diphtheria, either through a careless I diagnosis or an uulaudable motive of the . attendant. Babies always have "croup," ! you know, yet I venture my life that not j one in a hundred ever had any sneh dis 1 ease. Babies with croup are sick, and ! not generally nine hundred and ninety J nine out of a thousand get well. So with j diphtheria, yet cases sometimes are very ; mild. I give 110 treatment, as it is a disease that only a physician should take hold of. In Kc4inir of the Birds. George T. Fish, of Rochester, chair- ! man of the committee 011 ornithology, j presented to tho Western New York i Horticultural Society 11 well-considered statement touching the usefulness of our j feathered friends. A French naturalist , ascertained by careful investigation that a single insect might in five generations become the progenitor of five thousand millions of descendants. With these appalling figures before us we are , forced to the conclusion that were the j birds destroyed a desolation would result, ; compared with whbh the grasshopper plague of the West would smli mto in significance. The vocal melody of birds would give place to tho constant buzzing, scraping, hissing sound of insects, not long, however, to be endured, for tho destruction of vegetation must ine- vitably be followed by the destruction of si in annual life. It is evident God ele- signed that the birds should hold the insects in check. Can we afford to elis- peuse with even a part of their assist ance because it costs us something in fruit i We ure willing to pay money for fertilizers and for labor. We even pay m?n for destroying insects, and regard it as a profitable investment. It is un reasonable to demand that the entire work of the bird sliall be gratuitous. While the committee would advise the protection of birds as a class, they think experience has shown that the pugna cious character of the English sparrow renders hiiu an uudesirable settler. Our domestic birds, more peaceably dis posed, incline to leave him the whole field, and his introduction to this coun try is probably no improvement on na ture's plan. It would seem to be better to encourage by every means au income of emr native tribes. A Singular Discovery. Mr. Brunei', a perfectly reliable gentle- nuiu, whose home isatAugelos, California, ' is authority for the following. Wliile lie "u,t hired man was herding his stock 1 about six miles from the South Grove" ; iu tliis county, they noticed a small hole i "'"'"t a f"t i" diameter and smoothed ' offi ,ns if done with a mason's trowel, j 'i'heir curiosity being urousod, they ex- ! uniined it and dropped a roe'k into it, ' winch seemed to full a few feet and lodge ; i the next eltort was more successful, and H,p v.ielf nftuv fullino ..i.oi'.1.s.K1 ,i;a. - -- .a ... ..,.,.... ,..,.., vi i', tance seemed to stiike.and caused, a deaf- ening, crashing noise perfectly indescrib- HblH' 11 seemed to them that in com- : parison tiiuuder would oe a nuiaby and i the roar of artiUery a murmur. The j men lost no time iu getting away from j the place, but iu a short time, the noise , liaving partially subsided, they returned to it ; they wore, however, perfectly ! (satisfied without trying any more experi- merits. Mr. Bruuer ventures no theory about this, but only states the facta. ; Now.will some of our learned gentlemen ! explain this natural ciuiobity ( Tha New H.vn Jnnruai mv it . Massachusetts from one hakimr establish- i ment in that city, j EXPERIMENTS WITH HITTER. What han brrn ArroinpUnlird In Ueruinny and What .lnre In Kxpertrd. A new breed of cattle has been pro duced in Germany, and a correspohdent of the Wfjrhl who visited th stables of a noted breeder, writes as follows : M. Van Koppenael went on to state that the object he set out with was to produce a hybrid of the genus Bos that would be superior to the improved ox in health, in speed, in milking qualities and in beef ing qualities a hybrid that would bo able to reproduce its kind and be con stant iu its adherence to the type from which it originated. His first experi ment was that of crossing a Shropshire cow with a bull of the South African buffalo, and was suggested by a simi larity in the arrangement of the bonis of the two animals. The product was a sterile monster of hideous proportions. He next attempted a hybrid between the Brahminy bull and a Dutch cow, the product again being sterile and worth less. The same result came from cross ing the domestic animal with tho Indian buffalo, the gayal, the yak and thn American bison. By a lucky accident, however, he discovered flint, a cross be tween the bison and the Brahmin cow was fertile, and this led him to experi ments in the right direction, winch finally had results of tho happiest sort. The result of the experiments was a bull weighing 1,01)0 pounds and a cow weighing 1,000. I was surprised at what M. Van Kop penael told me of the milking qualities of his new hybrid. The cows which he showed me were yielding an average per capita of 12,000 pounds of milk per annum, aud this milk is so rich in butvraceous properties that its average yieio. 01 oiiLirer is one pouuci 111 lime, thus equaling the finest strums of Jersey cat- ; "troy the codling worms, the society tie. ' ; would do it for him. Every man did his " Have these precious animals no I duty, and the past year the fruit was fault i" I asked. ' greatly improved. The codling moth "They have," replied M. Van Kop- : came to us as one of the benefits of our penael, " a very grave fault. They are ' foreign commerce a fact- which illus very impatient of confinement. I shall ; trates the importance of entomological have to breed this out of them before I j knowledge, when we consider how much can venture to think them perfect, and I i we have lost by not knowing these ene do not know how to do it, unless I in- mies and suppressing them wheu they troduce another cross of the Jinn Judi- ; were few. Jf we had killed them all cum by breeding the Trisnbramak to that. ' during the first two or three years of Another thing, I have not room here. I ) their sojourn, at an expense of $1,000 need your Western prairies or your blue-, apiece, we should have made money grass regions to give my herds a lair j by it. chance, but I am too old to immigrate. It gives frightful interest to those de Those who come after nie will develop predations when we consider that the the experiment, and bring out its full repeated destruction and failure of the results. After the Jinn rommnitun has I young fruit will lead to shy bearing and been made reasonably perfect, a e'loseaiul 1 sterility from the force of habit. Ani- tnorongn system ot 111 and 111 breeding ; will be needed to mature nnd round oft all the excellence of the new animal, That is what I muy not hope to ! which drop their immature fruit from achieve." the sting of insects will soon utterly fail Aftenshowiug me much more of his to perfect their frhit even if insect do menagerie and much nnd curious talk ' not trouble them. With trees, as with which I need not repeat here, I returned ' us all, good habits are quite indispensa to the house with M. Van Koppenael. I ble to usefulness. This codling nuis At lunch I had the opportunity to taste ' ance, like certain devils in Scripture, the rich golden butter and cheese made don't yield to mild treatment. You can't from the milk of Htm cotiipnxilHK, or the 1 frighten them with scarecrows, nor coax Van Koppenael cow, as it ought to be thom with sweets, but you must fight called. j them by auy and all methods known in M. Van Koppenael informed me that civilized and uncivilized warfare, it was the success ef his friend Van ; The Colorado potato beetle is now a Mons, the great horticulturist of Ghent, ' subject of great anxiety in our States, in producing the new hybid fruits of i Next in importance to wheat, the potato such superior quality that set him upon j demands our best endeavors for its pro attempting to improve the race of cat- j toction and preservation. So great has tie. The known delie-aey of constitution ! been the destruction of this household ami tendency to sterility of the best strains of snort horns made him think of going back to the wild blood, just as j Mr. Goodrich did with the pot it o. He tells me that its remarkable fecundity is one of the most valuable traits of tho Jlon coiiixjnitKit, Every cow that he has bred so far has fetched him twin calves. ! I think it probable that iu a vear or two at least M. Van Koppenael will ; be short, and this and several other in- famine stricken people of Asia Minor transfer a portion of his improved stock j sect posts have a more congenial climate ' urgently request the English and Ameri to Kentucky. He was very particular in I at the West, where they originated, than 1 Cll Presa to let it be known that their 111s inquiries unout the nine gras conn- try, aud was charmed with tho glowing description which I gave him of those ! grand pastures and grassy open woods I mnfrninVelit with treiu nf i ! growth. Editors' Work. The Cincinnati Gazette has a sensible and timely article ou the editorial sanc tum and its visitors, from which we make the following extract : Not all who visit editorial rooms are intruders or bores, but a great many are, and these are so numerous that all" visi tors ure looked upon with some ilegree of suspicion until their business becomes known. It is never pleasant to be in terrupted in editorial work. It has a tendency to make men cross. There is a pressure upon editors. They work nearly all the time under a pressure. Often their ideas do not flow freely, and when they are not pleasing themselves they are not iu a mood to spend much time upon those who interrupt them. We suppose it is safe to say that three fourths of those that call to see " the editor" havo no business properly with that individual. Often they do not know him personally, and in order to find him they interrupt half a dozen men, who have important work to do, and only a limited time to do it iu. Then, if they receive short answers, thev feel uccrieveii. and talk about impolite treatment. The editorial rooms of a newspaper establish- ment are private, and ure only to be visited, except as a matter "of favor, by those who have business with the editor. I'he best way, if people have something to say to the editor, is to write that something down and send it to him. .riitt il fc.f tun. both sides, ami .nine times out -rviews. lias would save time ou answer a better purpose of ten, than personal mt ' Discliargliisj " a Servaut. 'n.- T i.... i:. ...... . iiu i. ing without reference to particular appli- canon a is a great privilege lor a man to be permitted to serve a lady. Practi- j cully, however, much depends ou who j the lady is, and iu what capacity the ser- ; vices is rendered ; it is no great privilege io none Mia. jveiuiug us a DUtler. ilns lady, tho wife of a retired colonel living near Aldershot, discharged her domestic some mouths ago, und on his refusal to leave without orders from the master ' colonel had told his man to take no no tioe of the lady b commands," sue attempted io, aim really did, enforce that institution. Even the shavings from j without waiting or the departure of no her liiaudate with a loaded revolver. the nolo leather have their use, und from I purcho: or, or tt-uiptiiig to disguise tin' lor this fi-eak of the mumble creature j them the puncakes aio made. These mio.dity of the transaction, he div the colonel has to pay fifty pounds shavings are placed upon a table before j the nioiu-y into I hive parts, of whic damages by law awarded. It is curious I thu operatives, who aepaiaH uud care-' ui d hi t compa iion took two, g v n and instructive to observe that thn ' fullv aoivml tl ll'lll llllt. Wit-lilt! it. khlllll I tl:11 1 fit Hill 11 'lllll.l.-V lltviw.i. ..f il. ORCHARD AM) GARDEN. A Chapter on rim llnv Dial rfo so much ItainnHe. Major Hugh T. Brooks, of Pearl Creek, in his remarks before the West ern New York Horticultural Society, as sured his hearers that the bugs are hav ing a good time generally, and that "no body about hero " disturbed them to any alarming extent, and we bear our ills with patience. When we don't like tho taste of the worm in the apple we spit him out. When cucumbers aud melons dis appear we expected it, aud we moralize 011 the transitory nature of earthly things. We flare up if somebody kicks our worthless cur, but we stand by and without remonstrance see worms devour our currants and our cabbage. Bugs of old seemed to respect the Jewish arrange ment, and conteuted themselves with a tenth; now they frequently take the whole, and the questiou arises, How long can we stand it There are many dama ges that money cannot measure. Shrub bery, watched and nourished with ten der care, perhaps planted by loved ones departed, puuetured by a littlo worm and turned to dry wood. Can you enter that upon your ledger ? Assuredly we need concerted effort to overcome insect enemies. We must all , work together. If one mau kills worms and another breeds them, the breeder will get the best of it, or the worst. But where is the right to propagate nuisances? We might as well set up pest-houses as a worm factory; as well send out our pigs and poultry to depredate upon our neigh bors, as our codling moths. Our Mich- gan mends nave met tins crisis reso- lutely. One of their- pomoloincal asso ciations resolved that if anv fruit-grower negiei-te'u 10 oaiuiage 111s irees unci ue- nuns that prematurely cast their young from injury soon do so from force of habit: and Ave may well infer that trees necessary at the West by grasshoppers and drought that it is at present iu many sections the dearest article of food in the market. It has been a very profita ble crop in Western New York, and we cannot urge too strongly that growers make a concerted and determined effort for the destruction of its relentless enemy. It is probable that its stay with us will It is probable that its stay with us will here. A good kitchen garden is one of the possibilities of rural life. In its best I state it is a perfect fountain of cood ! tliiurra Knf .i.l.ll..i 1.-, tl.n I I our country gardens are n, fizzle and a fraud eu the women who coax them into a feeble existence when they are allowed to " go to the bugs ! Currant sprouts cost nothing, and being persistent grow ers we had them, and they did great ser vice. The worm spoiled the currants, and we meekly gave them up. Now, this is to bear witness that white helle bore dusted on tho bushes when the dew is on will save the currants, and any one who has lost his bushes should forthwith replace them nnd take care of them. One of two eir three tilings that weex- pect to nnd m country gardens besides cents per pound. Ihe patrons delivered weeds is cabbages. A green worm, about curd instead of milk. Tho second fac an inch long, acquired a taste for cab-1 tory was built also in Mosiertown bage and quietly took it. Sprinkle on iu 1851, and continued in operation throe soapsuds, or salt, or dust from the road, years, and then the system came to au ami the worm will be disgusted. Shake I end. The first faetory'nnder the present iu the cabbage cayenne pepper, or sprin- j associated system was built by George kle on boiling hot water, and you will j Thomas in 1867, at Cambridge. The soon be rid of him. A moderate appli- i second factory was built by Messrs, D. cation of hot water will not injure the H. Gibson & Co., iu liSfW, manufacturing plant, as it has a thick, tough leaf. I the first year 27,000 pounds of cheese, Coop a hen among your squash vines j and two years later 145,000 pounds. In with a brood of chickens, and the chick-1 1870 there existed in the State of Ponu ens will take care of the squash, if j sylvauia twenty-seven factories. It is es you only plant plenty if seed. Don't ' t minted that there was produced during fail to put boxes, ia niches by 14, rouud I 1 , , 1 , ! 'i' cucumbers, and 10 inches high, j D this wh-n you plant, and then it will none, ogiecieti gardens uon t pay; well-cultivated ones do pay. Iu conclu- ; Kin, the major earnestly invoked deter- mined and united effort aeraiust insect enemies. The work is a duty every hus- huudmnn owes to his ) ........ ........ . ..... jj, .. .......ii, .i.ivA ! the individual who can lay his baud on I 'lis heart, and looking you in the face truthfully declare that ho has killed, or gencration, and iisly crippled, one coddling I uu",l' 'lvuw l,n"B lo ltlo" tnem not lived in vuiu, and may I selvt'M wlt" their lKduee. He chanced ! sink into the silent tomb with a glem ' ' Working In Leather. The Belfast (Me.) Journal tells how ' of course exorbitant; but after a proper au enterprising woman is making money amount of haggling a fair price per hun there : It is not of that article of diet ' died was agreed upou and the bargain mude by our grandmothers that we are ' concluded. to speak, but a pancake of a less disges- j The purchaser pulled out his money ttblo nature, manufactured nt the Bui- and was about to hand it to the old fust shoe factory. Nothing iu the shupe j countryman, when the second lounger oi ieni uer is uilowed to go to waste m casing with paste, end the whole patted down compactly, When a enke is com - Kenis of Interest. The Canadian canals are to be deep ened to fourteen feet. Make out your bills and them collect them. The first is comparatively easy not so the last. The Bishop of Carlisle has pronounced himself in favor of tho administration of the cat to wife-beaters. The first impressions made by printers are invariably cast aside, because tlioso that follow tiiem arc better. A Fall River mule spinner has to travel nine thousand miles while on duty during the year to earn S75. Paris annually consumes an average of one hundred and twenty-five pounds of meat for each of its inhabitants. The population of Louisiana, accord ing to the last census, numbered 301,430 whites and 4G3,(Mi7 blacks, a colored majority of 01,617. The obituary notice of a much respect ed lady concludes with " In her life she was a pattern worthy to be followed; and her death oh, how consoling to her friends." Friendship is a good deal like chil a. It is very beautiful and durable at lm g as it is quite whole ; but break it, and 1 11 tho cement in the world will never quite repair the damage. Gen. M. L. Smith, whose sudden denth has been announced, is said to have had his life insured for nearly ,100, 000, and just before leaving Washington for New York took out a 8(5,000 accident policy. "Tho child has since died," is the laconic remark which a paper affixes to an account of a twelve-year-old girl who had already mastered logic, rhetoric, 1 m -niogy, iiiiuuiy. nun 1111: iumrni n vi mental and moral science. The present system of penal servitude for women in England is one of solitioy confinement, audit is asserted that not ' one woman iu twenty undergoes im I prisonnient of over a year's duration 1 wiMiout showing signs of temporary in sanity. At Trevoux, 111 France, a farmer's 1 oy killed two young owls in a nest near (h' house, and the tild owls watched around for several nights, till on the fifth nigl t au tild male owl struck the same boy in tho face and put one ef his talons in the boy's left eye. A Western )a rjaiiiilla, who has raised two families, has discovered that children grow more between January and July than in the other half of the vear. lis theory is that the crowth of i humanity is governed by th.i same laws wiucn prevail over 1110 vegetable i;ing- elom. "Yes, I like, these short ilays," said old Truepenny, tho other morning, join ing iu the discussion; "the interest counts up so fast. Why, when 1 come into my place mornings, and get out my securities, I can fairly hear them draw interest, right through the side of tho box. I A New York life insurance company, I in a recent publication giving a liiit of I gentleman who hold policies 011 their hves, puts down Alexander T. Stewart as I insured for $100,000. This paper is j authorized to state that there in not and never has been any insurance whatever I on Mr. Stewart's life. j A party of juvenile fiends out in Mis I souri tied an unpopular schoolmate to the railroad track, when; the lito was crushed out of him by a passing train. These young villains, when grown up, will probably black their faces and assist in the administration of the laws accord ing to the code of Judge Lynch. The committee of relief for the funds are exhausted, while the distress is increasing. They state that it will be necessary to clothe, feed and give niedi- 1 cal assistance to several hundred thou I sand persons until next June. The Sale of Cheese. The president of the Pennsylvania Dairy Association, at a lata meeting, gave an interesting and suggestive ad dress on " Co-operation iu the Sale of Cheese." He commenced by alluding to the early history of cheese-making in this section. The first attempt at fac tory cheese-making was made in 1819, at Mosiertown, by Clark & Stobbins, who made au English eluiry cheese weighing about sixteen pounds, selling it nt throe the past season in the counties of Crtiw- 1 11..: . 1 1 ...i r ,w.,t j ford, Erie, aud Mercer, about 9,000,000 pounds of cheese, valued at 5fl, 200,000, Blackmail In Naples. A gentleman who is very fond of that pungent little gourd known as the pep- eroM, decided tne other day to lay in a '.,-.1 lifiii j 8.to,'k Vf ht'a' ?u'1 for that purpose went I ''ow" mto VlH lower, or eastern, part of Naples, where the trades-people from : "P0" 811 !'ld mrtu wuo hiul ft m-'0 lot of j ins iiivorue vegetable, ami began to ask aooui tne price. ienw tne old man were standing a couple of loafers. One of these fellowK named a sum, which was j stepped forward and took it. This do I duoo. who hid remained uii lv 1 while this disposition was g iug o i